Andean glaciers are melting at a rate that is unprecedented in human history, study finds

Aug 3, 2024 | 0 comments

By Alexander Villegas

Recent glacier retreat across the Andes is unprecedented in the history of human civilization, according to a new study published, opens new tab in the Science journal on Thursday.

The Cordillera Blanca mountain range in the Peruvian Andes.

The discovery shocked scientists, who initially planned to study the current state of glaciers and how they had varied throughout human civilization.

“We thought this result was decades away,” said Andrew Gorin, lead author of the study, who first believed the initial results were a fluke, but were confirmed by later samples. It goes to show you that this is happening faster than even those of us that think about this the most believed.”

Gorin and the team of scientists carbon-dated bedrock that had been recently exposed by retreated glaciers by measuring beryllium-10 and carbon-14 nuclide levels and found that concentrations were nearly zero.

“Basically, if your rock can see the sky, it’s accumulating these nuclides,” Gorin said, adding that the decay rate of these nuclides show that the rock hadn’t been exposed during the Holocene Era, which dates back 11,700 years, but could go back even further.

“I would bet my whole life savings that in fact, these glaciers are smaller than they’ve been since the last interglacial period,” which ended about 115,000 years ago, Gorin said.

The study collected data at four glaciers across the Andes, which comprises 99% of the world’s tropical glaciers. These glaciers are more susceptible to changing weather since they’re consistently at or near freezing point.

“We think this is the canary in the coal mine, that this is going to happen everywhere before long and maybe sooner than we thought,” Gorin said.

A Reuters correspondent recently climbed multiple mountains across the Andes to see the changes mountaineers were witnessing firsthand as glaciers retreated. Many described increasingly dangerous conditions and changes unprecedented in their lifetimes.

“I think that it’s a sign that we’re now departing the condition, the climatic conditions that we’ve been used to, that we’ve built our global civilization, as we know it, in.”
________________

Credit: Reuters

CuencaHighLife

Dani News

Hogar Esperanza – News

Google ad

The Cuenca Dispatch

Week of September 15

The Massive Blackout of September 2024.

Read more

Getting Rid of Verónica Abad: The Conflict the Government is Racing to Resolve.

Read more

Puerto Cabuyal: the commune that protects a marine reserve in Ecuador.

Read more

Fund Grace News

Amazon eco lodge News

Google ad